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Salting, Brining

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Title: Salting, Brining


1
Salting,Brining
  • FSN 661
  • April 2009

2
Salting
  • Salting is an ancient and traditional method in
    many countries
  • The principle is to reduce water activity (aw) of
    fish muscle to retard microbial spoilage and
    chemical reactions
  • Salt passes into the muscle, and at about 6-10
    conc. in the tissue it will prevent major
    spoilage organisms

3
Movement of water and salt
Diffusion of salt in
Salt
High Salt
Conc.
Water
Osmotic transfer of water out
4
Effects
  • Loss of water
  • Limits bacterial growth
  • Limits enzyme activity
  • Increase of salt
  • Limits bacterial growth
  • May limit enzyme activity

5
Grades of Salt
  • Different grades of salt, from 80-99.9 purity
  • Purer salt leads to less problems
  • less contaminants, e.g. sand, dust, water,
    calcium, magnesium (slow salt penetration and
    leads to problems, e.g. water uptake, bitterness)
  • less contamination with halophilic bacteria (salt
    tolerant)
  • Some salts can have up to 105/g of bacteria

6
Grades of Salt, cont.
  • At least 95 purity should be used
  • Impure salts have only about 80 NaCl
  • Solar salt most impure (major source of
    halophiles)
  • Can purify by washing briefly with water (calcium
    and magnesium dissolve sooner than NaCl)
  • Finer salts are ideal for brines (dissolve
    rapidly)
  • Larger size salt preferred during dry salting

7
Impurities in salt
  • Calcium and Magnesium salts
  • Reduce the diffusion rate
  • Absorb moisture from the air
  • Bitter flavor
  • Whiter cure (sometimes preferred)

8
Impurities in salt
  • Iron and Copper salts
  • Surface browning and yellowing
  • Accelerate rancidity

9
Production of sea-salt
  • Sea water is placed in settling ponds and the
    particulate materials are allowed to settle out.
  • Evaporation concentrates the salts until the
    least soluble salts, calcium carbonate
    (limestone) and calcium sulfate (gypsum),
    crystallize and settle out.
  • The water is then moved to a second pond.
  • Further evaporation causes the sodium chloride to
    precipitate.
  • After most of the NaCl has precipitated, the
    concentrated brine is drained off and the
    precipitated NaCl dried.

10
Microbial growth
  • lt 6 salt
  • Halophiles cannot grow
  • gt6 8 salt
  • Normal spoilage bacteria inhibited
  • 6 12 salt
  • Some bacteria grow slowly (T)
  • 12 - saturated salt
  • Halophiles grow well

11
Fish in saturated salt brine at 0.75
12
Halobacteria growing in a salted pond
13
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14
Critical salt content
15
Protein denaturation
  • Above the critical salt content, there is rapid
    protein denaturation.
  • Therefore, heavily salted fish cannot reach its
    original form / quality when re-hydrated.

16
Mechanism
  • Salt and water exchange occur at a front, when
    critical salt concentration is reached.
  • This front moves from the surface to the center
    of the fish

17
Methods of Salting
  • Methods of salting
  • Brine salting (270-360 g NaCl/L)
  • Fish immersed in solution of salt
  • Frequent stirring necessary
  • Replacement of salt in brine may be needed
  • Need to supply fresh brine to new batch of fish
  • Dry salting (about 3-4 parts fish to 1 part salt)
  • Salt rubbed into fish surface and fish left
    uncovered to dry
  • Not recommended in tropical regions due to
    insects and rodents
  • Insect/rodent parts and excrements (a.k.a
    filth) common in certain processed fish

18
Methods of salting (cont.)
  • Kench salting
  • Alternate layers of split fish and dry salt
  • Piled up to 3 ft high
  • Extracted water is drained off
  • Periodic re-piling
  • Final salt content depends on
  • Thickness
  • Temperature
  • Amount of salt

19
Methods of salting (cont.)
  • Pickle salting
  • Same as above but pickle does not go away as fish
    are packed in water tight containers (at least 1
    meter deep)
  • Pickle is from water and blood leaking from the
    muscle as salt penetrates
  • Need about 30 salt for this to occur
  • Salt brine injection
  • Fish injected with salt solution and phosphates,
    then soaked in salt solution for 2 days (10oC)
    and then kench salted

20
Mackerel being dry-salted
21
  • Process example (salted groundfish)
  • Head, gut and wash fish
  • Soak in 10 brine for 30 min
  • Drain
  • Dry salt fish in shallow boxes
  • Stack fish up first one skin down, last one skin
    up
  • Leave for about 12 h up to 30 days
  • Wash salt crystals away with 10 brine or
    seawater
  • Dry fish during day
  • Pile fish up overnight
  • Pack product

22
Typical cod salting operation (kench salting)
Splitting the cod
23
Salting the cod
24
Maturation period in salt
25
Drying the cod
26
Drying fish the old way (still widely done)
27
Rapid salting
  • Boiled salted fish
  • Fish fillets and salt are steamed in a pouch for
    2 hrs
  • Drip is discarded
  • More salt added and steamed for 2 more hrs.
  • Pouch drained and sealed.
  • Shelf life can be 3 months at room T
  • Labor intensive, but product obtained in 1 day

28
Rapid salting, cont.
  • Bagged salted fish
  • Transit and storage time is used to salt the
    fish.
  • Raw fish placed in bag 16 parts fish, 6 parts
    salt, 2 parts water. Air expelled, sealed.
  • Salting may not be uniform possibility of
    spoilage
  • Accidental puncture causes total loss of product

29
Rapid salting, cont.
  • Dehydration Injection Salting
  • Freeze-drying, then injection of salt brine
  • Most rapid, and controlled method.
  • Freeze-drying is expensive
  • Timing of injection critical.

30
Rapid salting, cont.
  • Del Valle-Nickerson method
  • Fish is ground in the presence of salt (20 100
    of the weight of fish)
  • Product is pressed in a mechanical press
  • The press cake is dried to 49 wb moisture (rate
    limiting step). The salt content after drying can
    be 22.6 wb.

31
Rapid salting, cont.
  • Anderson-Mendelsohn method
  • Minced or ground fish mixed with excess salt (4
    parts fish to 1 part salt) in a brine.
  • Free liquid is pressed out
  • The press cake is dried.
  • Brine minimizes contact with air, and reduces
    oxidation.
  • If exposed to light the product may brown.

32
Old Icelandic way
33
Quality inspection and packaging
34
Injection
35
Distributing the fish
36
2 day soaking period in salt
37
Fillet sorting/grading and packaging
38
Pickle salting
Late stages
Early stages
39
  • What influences the salting process
  • Fish thickness -gt thicker slower NaCl uptake
  • Fish fat content -gt more slower NaCl uptake
  • Fish quality -gt older faster NaCl uptake
  • Salt concentration and quality
  • Temperature
  • More rapid salt penetration as T is higher
  • More chance of spoilage (normally in center of
    fish, turns into a smelly paste)

40
Storage
  • Keep cool, dry and well ventilated
  • Have plenty of insect/rodent traps
  • The saltier the product the longer the shelf-life

41
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42
Sliming
  • Yellow or beige slime at the surface.
  • Pungent smell
  • Occurs at 6-8 salt (light slated)
  • Require high oxygen levels
  • Higher T promotes sliming

43
Red halophilic bacteria
  • Pseudomonas salinaria and Sarcina
  • Indole and H2S production foul smell
  • Salt is generally the source of contamination
  • Wash with fresh water kills halophiles
  • Higher T needed for growth (15 to 80 C)
  • Keep T low.

44
Dun
  • Mold Sporendonema epizoum
  • Optimum salt 10-15, T25 C
  • Peppering of black, brown spots at the surface.
  • Harmless but ugly.
  • From surface to the interior through roots
  • Requires min 5 salt. Wash with 0.1 sorbic acid.

45
Pilot plant / lab
  • See the salted fish
  • Drain and salt again until Thursday
  • Observe Thursday
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